Application of Composite Flour from Indonesian Local Tubers in Gluten-Free Pancakes.

Foods

Research Center for Biomass and Bioproducts, Cibinong Science Center, National Researchand Innovation Agency, West Java, Cibinong 16911, Indonesia.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pancakes traditionally use wheat flour, which some people can't consume due to gluten allergies, prompting the exploration of alternative flours like modified cassava (mocaf), arrowroot, and suweg flour.
  • Mixing these flours in different ratios (70:15:15, 70:20:10, and 70:20:5) affected various qualities such as viscosity, color, and texture of the composite flour.
  • The best mix for producing a gluten-free pancake with a texture and taste closest to regular pancakes was found to be 70% mocaf flour, 15% arrowroot flour, and 15% suweg flour.

Article Abstract

Pancakes are fast food snacks that are generally made with wheat flour as the basic ingredients, which is an imported commodity and detrimental for people who are allergic to gluten. To reduce the use of wheat, alternative raw materials derived from local commodities are used, such as modified cassava flour (mocaf), arrowroot flour, and suweg flour. The experiment was carried out by mixing mocaf flour, arrowroot flour, and suweg flour to produce composite flour with a ratio of 70:15:15 (CF1), 70:20:10 (CF2), and 70:20:5 (CF3). The result showed that the ratio of mocaf flour, arrowroot flour, and suweg flour had a significant effect on pasting temperature, peak viscosity, hold viscosity, breakdown viscosity, setback, L*, a*, hue, whiteness, ∆E, as well as swelling volume and solubility on the characteristics of the composite flour. There was also a significant effect on the texture characteristics of hardness, adhesiveness, chewiness, color characteristics L*, a*, whiteness, ∆E, and flavor preference for the gluten-free pancake products. The best formulation to produce pancakes that have characteristics similar to wheat flour-based pancakes was 70% mocaf flour, 15% arrowroot flour, and 15% suweg flour.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10178693PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12091892DOI Listing

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